The evening world. Newspaper, July 29, 1913, Page 16

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“wall paper to flaming. Of fireworks left over from a former _ WORK MONDAY WONDERS. CHINESE AND WIFE LOSE THEIR LIES | NCHNAINN RE Gallant Rescues by Police ‘When Flames Sweep 100- Year-Old House. EIGHT PERSONS HURT. Kettle of Grease in Restaurant Boils Over and Fire- works Add to Blaze. ‘A pot of fat on the stove in Ching ‘Woo'e restaurant, in the ancient putid-] ing at No. 4 Bowery, bolled over to-day eué started a fire in which two lives ‘Were Jost and eight persona hurt. No. 4 Bowery is more than « century old. Its mur'y, stained walle have been considered among the old tand- Marks of the Bowery as long as the oldest living New Yorker can remem- ber. Ching Woo's restaurant now oc- capies the ground floor, and Chinese and white women live above, There is @ rear entrance through an alley, run- Ning alongside No. 2% Doyern atreet. A dozen or more Chinese were in the festaurant eating a Inte supper wh: the cook put thi burning Driskly and the pot was e0on bubbling. the cook could get to it, euper- Rested fat popped over the edges of the kettle and set the greasy floor and LONDON, July 29.—Justice Bucknill in the Divorce Court has ordered Eric Loder, the wealthy young London cluby man, to toe back to !'* heart the fam- ous Galety Deauty, Gabrielle Ray, whom he made his wife in March last year, loving her #o much then that he mar- ried her the day after she had jnted him at the altar, leaving him with all his The flames licked their way up the wall to the hundred-year-old rafters, Where Ching Woo had stored a quantity eelebration in Chinatown. The explod- {ng fireworks sent the customers scurrying from the restaurant !n alarm. "THE EV Most Pictured Gaiety Beauty Who Wins First Move for Divorce friends waiting In the churc. But he won't go back to her now, the Pretty actreas thinks, and th» order for | reatitution of conjugal righty which she | obtained aéter atirring the héarts of the Junior bar to inexpressible depths by weepmg in court, is only the first step toward divorce. Loder's refusal to com- ply with the order will constitute cruelty. CARRY OUT INJURED COUPLE AND RETURN FOR MORE. The ancient timbers burned almost Uke paper and the blase was bursting through to the second floor by the time the fireworks began to whirr and pop. Policeman Griffin of the Elisabeth street etation, who heard tl commotion, in alarm Bowery and Division street. As he ran tack to the fire he was joined Policeman Daly f the Oak etreet station. The policemen climbed to @ window balcony and from there to the fire- escape landing at the second floor, where the drop indder was lowered. Entering a. window, they found Chu Lan and his white wife, Mabel, partly emake and slightly burned. Daly carried the pair down ladder Into Olliffe's drug store St No. 6 Bowery, where Dr. Robinson was summoned from Gouverneur Hos- pital. He treated the Chinese and hie and then dressed the burned hands @f the policemen, While this rescue being made at the front of the bullding, Police Sergeant Barnes and Andy Bilp of No. 77 Sullivan wtreet climbed together to the second floor in the rear, where they found Sadie Gibney, who Is anid to be known fm the neighborhood as “Philadelphia Kitty,” and a Mrs. Sobwatter, ‘These women were also carried to OMiffe’s store, Barnes and Blip wrap- Ding dlankets around the women and also swathing themselves’ in blankets, Indien fashion, for the dash through @moke and fire to the window. Serst. Baroes unhurt, but both the women required Dr. Robinson's at- NO DOUBT OF 1T—Wilson's view supporters, RHODE ISLAND CAT catohes frogs the legs for her owner, hie own by any means, REPORTED QUININE CORNER and patients shiver, departed this life at the untimely aj burglars promised to reform, Bogine Company No. ® was the first ¢°the fire department to arrive and Barnes, its command seeing the extent of the fire, sounded a second @arm, which brought a reinforcement of apparatus end both Obief Kenlon and Assistant Chief Turpenny. ORY “THERE ARE MORE PEOPLE INGIDE.” Phe men Engine Company No. 9 ‘were getting into action in the rear of hp dullding, where the fire was worst, ‘when the cry went up, “There are more people inside.” Company No. 7 dust and Lieut. Ross of that orgrni- Sation, accompanied by two of his men Barnett and Gresland—dashed into the Qullding. Pipemen of No, 9 with their Bese aimed through windows. played on Bee oem Me He Tan they atrnaeien up- Dugsled over the withdrawal from circ! nickels, FISHING SMACK CREW off Atlanti ing 1,300 pounds. MRS, J, C, BROWN of Denver is built abroad for use in It han a silver body on and electric cooker, NOT FROM THE GARDEN spor, up by an obstreperous cow on her way came from Bay Rid, POSED POLICEMAN, NOW ALAW STUDENT, HELD FOR $250 THEFT Otto W. Fredericks Accused of Collecting Money and Fail- ing to Account for It. Qn the third floor they found Steven Les, @ Chinese; his white wife, Ivy Lee, en@ Fanny Miller. The flames were sweeping about the beds on which the three lay unconscious Each of the Gremen picked up one of the limp forms and be, de: t ef the they When the res- cuers staggered into Olliffe's with their burdens Dr. Robinson and Dr, of Archer the Fire Department immediately nt to work on the Lees, who were seriously burned. Ivy Lee did not regain consciounness,| Otto W but died on the drug store floor ten minutes after she was laid there by the fireman who bore her trom the vurning | Fredericks, from the who was din- missed police force two Dullding. i? husband was given tem- |S John's Hospital when supposed to porary treatment and then rushed to| be on patrol, wax held to-day by Mag- v 1498 in Di o mereeneur pa tee lhe zee veg | itrate Leach in Long Island Clty ihe ‘macrhing. Court on a charge of robbing Otto Before he died Lee regained conscious- bman of No, 1825 Chisholm atreet ners. He said he was thirty years old of § Fredericks han been study- ahd a iaundryman. His wife, he sald, | ing thw aince he left the department. was (wenty-five. Iatie: as her age, te Gouverneur Hh hi Fanny Miller gave the | 0 Danitman, who ts a shipping clerk at She was taken |. 480 Broadway, Manhattan, lericks appeared at the store last N. Adams, a Long r, who Was about Inland City p begin fore- Quilding a few minutes after the Lees News Oddities PEDESTRIAN WESTON Is on the last leg of his Westward hike, but not on SINCE ATLANTIC CITY has been ‘dry’ on Sundays 222 empty beer bottles have been picked up In seven blocks of Wathing beach on a Monday morning, AMOS RUSIP, once famous pitcherof the Giants, is now @ plumber in Seattle. Not long ago he worked as a day laborer, REPUBLICAN CLOAKROOM B8TORY in Washington {s that Bryan left his poet because he had dropped his crown of thorns on the chair, TILDEN PIERCE OF PLYMOUTH, who began using tobacco at fourteen, has we of 101, NOTHER BULL MOOSE TRIUMPH.—Softened by a plea not to take & child's bank containing a check signed by Theodore Roosevelt, Jersey ———— TO KEEP HIS MEMORY GREEN, woman be continued from estate of dead man she had divorced, GROUNDS FOR ABANDONMENT.—Mra, Amelia Cohn says her husband left her because she was not stylish enough and couldn't play the plano, WHAT'S BECOME OF THE BUFFALO NICKEL: It ts believed they are being hoarded, Done up in small tin cans this fish Is called Tuna, her home for the entertainment of Unexpected friends, wheels and combines a pantry, refrigerator, sideboard This was an error; the cow years ago for going to bed ta a cot in} i said ary saying he represented Rich- | of the Mexican situation ¢inds many fo. avreelf and has been taught to save prospective rise in price makes malarial petitions court that her allmony Treasury oMcialn are | ulation of the recent issue of buffalo lo City caught a horse mackerel weigh- having @ miniafure lunch wagonette Brooklyn Bridge trolleys were tied to Jersey, and it was stated the cow came from Flatbush, re of interent is due, and that no payment | had been made on his account. Lawyer Adams {8 out of town and pending the taking of his testimony Fredericks was held in $1,000 bail, which he was unable to furnish. He was locked up, Fredericks had a stormy time in the Police Department. He had a etation house quarr with Owen Rudden, an- other policeman, Rudden was accused of firing several shots at him; but was indicted and acquitted. Then came the ra'd on St. John's Hospital, where Fred- ericke Was found and removed to the Station in his Charch Soctety's to Play. Forty bo. educated in musi by the Bt. Aloysius Fidelity, will give @ public band co! t in the public playground at Henry and Rapelye streets, Brooklyn, at2 P.M. to-morrow, The Fidellty was| organized by the Kev. Father Peter Bchroeder of the Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and Mary, wkiyn, four years to educate Italian chil- dien of the neighborhood and fit them Deuver .- 1 Oty of ai Lous’ | Micuamond” nH closure proceedings against property owned by Danhman'a mother. man gave him $250 to pay up back interest and stop the foreclosure, he eaid, The Roslyn Savings bank, according to Daubman, has since informed him that no foreclosure proreedings were j contemplated, ‘that only « email amount ere carried out, Only @ rough est! TBs Could be made of tie monetary lesa, Which was said to be not less than +4000 and possibly as much as $10,000, ———~>——— SUNDAY WORLD “WANTS” Daub- | Lampasas, 6 | Verona | OUTGOING STIMAMSHIPS, i] SAILED TO-DAY, | Bronprins Wilhel oly Montgomery. 1 Mat peepee, for such walks in life as they seemed best sulted, ‘ Ee | SHIPPING NEWS. | PORT OF \EW York, | ARKIVED, | ENING WORLD, INTCHEL TLS FUSIONSTS THEY SHOULDNAME HIM Goes Before Candidates’ Com- mittee and Explains His Political Views. SHARPS PICK M’ANENY. TUESD AY, JULY BROKER SAYS SON KILED SELF WHEN Yorker, Took Poison in Cleveland Hotel. ~ F. 8, Bevrdsiey, a ve' broker of Wall street cleared .up the mystery of his son's ran Declare He Will Re Favored for Mayoralty Over Mitchel and Whitman. John Purroy Mitchel, Collector of the Port, appeared before the Cand!- dates Committee of the Fusion Commit: tee of 107 thin afternoon, and fur- nished the members with his ideas of the sort of a man who should be se- lected for the Mayoralty. Mr. Mitchel had already suggested that all the “active” Mayoralty candidates in the fleld be aubmitted to a sort of cross examination, or questioning as to policy, pledges and promises—all of the latter to be made good, of cou Mr. Mitchel added that he was willing ta enter the contest and even went further. He declared he would accept no nomini tion from Tammany Hall, and he wa: foremost in making that declaration, He said he was willing to tell what he had learned about the Mayoralty Job during the elght or ten years he has been in public office. Once during the absence of Mayor Gaynor Mr. Mitchel was created a hubbub by revealing police conditions down at Coney Island. That was an experience also, the import of which he desired to convey to the com- mittee, After its deliberations and concluding all of its estimates of Borough Presi- agent McAneny, Collector Mitchel and District-Attorney Whitman, the Can- didates Committee announced that’ tt Was prepared to report its choices to the Executive Committee. This oom- mittee will also consider the suggested candidates and report to the committee of the whole—the formidable Committee of One Hundred and Seven, POLITICAL SHARPS SAY LOOKS LIKE M’ANENY. Political sharps who have their ears to the ground volunteered the report that the Candidates Committee favors Borough President McAneny for the Mayoralty and that the committee have eet aside the name of Collector Mitchel. Whitman has Joined Mitchel in the discard, it wan stated. by the Prophets, but they added that Whit- man would receive the straight out and out Repudlican nomination and go it alone. ‘ The rest of the Fusion ticket, it Is sald, Is to include Prend for Comp- troller on the Fuston, and Republican tickets; John Hopper of the Independence League for Borough Presi- dent on the Fusion ticket and Alderman H. H. Curran, the police investigator, on the Fusion and Republican tickets for President of the Board of Aldermen. Over in the Tammany camp the re- nomnatlon or designation of Gaynor for the Mayoralty was indicated as a “cinch, OMclally the fusion ticket framers will make final announcement to-morrow night of the result of the labors of the bod, in picking the best men for the several places on the fusion city ticket. pe ey int Company Fined #500, . Bornn, head of the Bornn Hat Company, to-day, when arraigned before Judge Ray in the Criminal Branch of the Federal Court, pleaded ullty to an indictment charging the undervaluation of two consignments of hats from Peru, one of which came by the ner Colon on Feb, 4, 1910, and the liner Allianca on Aug. 18, 1990. For one of the undervaluations Judge Ray im- posed a fine of $500, which was patd, and on the other undervaluation court was suspended, In settlement duty the Bornn Hat Company has paid the Government $5,000, IT acting Mayor and he!) suicide tn a Cleveland hotel last Thurs- ’ ‘ y. “So far," Mr. Beardsiey told an Evening World reporter, “I have tried to keep this terrible affair out of the Papers, but #0 many wicked falsehoods have been told that it is time for the fata to be known. “My son was not, and never had been, fn any real financial difMfculty. Dike mont young men Le spent considerably more than he earned, but I always made up the deficiency. I have check stubs right here to prove It. This makes the statement that there had ever been An estrangement between me and my son absurd. Father and son have never been on better terms than we were. 'y @on's marriage was the one un- fortunate experience of his life. to that time he had been a little wild and extravagant at times, but he had never got into any real diMculties. The statement that he tried to elope with a beautiful French girl a short time before he was married is a lie, I ha pt pretty good track of my tions, and I am sure. His married iife had not been happy, and as a climax to a number of ¢is- agreements ‘his wife without warning took the two children two weeks ago and back to her home in Menominee, ch, I can see how this would have affected my son, as he wan always passionately devoted to the children, “I understand that he owed the hotel $23 and had but % cents in his pocket, but that was not at all a novel position for him to be in. It was his domestic troubles that worrled him. I know, for a fact, that he was on the point of being offered a position with a salary of ten thousand a year." Young Beardsley was thirty years old and a Yale graduate. Since ieaving col- lege he had been connected with several large sugar concerns as an expert chem- let. Most of his time had been spent in Cuba, where he was known the best sugar expert that ever went to Cuba. At Menominee Mrs, C. Guy Bearda- ley, who first heard of her husband's suicide from @ newspaper reporter, re- fused to admit that domestic troubles could have had anything to do with the death of her husband. They were married two years. ago. His wife was Miss Clara Gonyou. Last Thursday Beardsley took some Poisonous crystals in his room on the fourth fleor of the Hotel Statler and died almost instantly, The body w shipped to New York ard the funer: was held last Sunday. jai WIFE GETS $500 A MONTH. Supreme Court Justice Donnelly to- day granted Mrs, Caroline W, Griffin $0 @ month alimony pending the trial of her sult for a separation from Dr, Edwin Harrison Griffin of No. 55 West Forty-seventh street. The Justice also allows her counsel, Lynn W. Thomp- son, @ counsel fee of $1,000, In her application for alimony and counsel fees Mrs. GriMn declared that her husband owned property valued at 4,000 and that his income from his Practice was over $50,000 a year, and she asked the,court to grant her all-! mony at the rate of $20,000 a year and a counsel fee of $2,600. The custody of a minor son !x awarded to Mrs, Griffin, but the doctor Is to see him at gultavle hours during the 4 SALVADOR, July 29,—Gen. Abra m Perdomo, well known througront (en: | tral America as @ military leader, w: shot dead to-day in the pri square of this city, the Parque Durnas, by a journalist named Arturo Goines, Gen. part in last year's revolution tn ragua, FAMILY DEPARTED C. Guy Beardsley, Son of New sugar to-day partly Up 8 al 29, 1018. WILSON ATTACKED FOR HIS ACTION IN CAMINETTI CASE Kahn in House Speech Talks of “Whitewash” and “In- Sidious Political Pull.” WASHINGTON, July 2%.-The Repub- lican filibuster, after paralyzing busl- ness in the House more than a week, accomplished {ts purpose to-day when the Democrats decided to allow five Hours’ discussion of the Diggs-Cami- nett!-MoNab-McReyrfolds embrogito. Weary of obstructive taction, the Democrats brought in a report from the Judictary Committee on a resolution by Representative Kahn of California, call- ing for a telegram from the Attorney- General May 16, directing MoNab to take no affirmative action in the Digga- Caminetti white slave cases until after receiving further advices from the Attor- ney-General. The committee report set forth that the Attorney-General had supplied & telegram which read as follows: “McNab, United States District-At- torney, San Francisco, Cal.: Please write me fully concerning charges against Caminettl and Diges and take no affirmative action in respect of same untill you receive advices from me. Answer, (Signed) ‘MY REYNOLDS, “Attorney-General.” Accompanying the telegram was a memorandum showing It was sent by the Attorney-General personally on the evening of May 16, Presenting the papers, the Judiciary Committee recom: mended that the Kahn resolution be tabled, since its purpose been ac- plished. On that report, Chairman |Clayton arranged for five hours’ debate |to allow’ Representatives Kahn and others to discuss all circumstances of | the Caminetti case. Representative Kahn pointed out that the iclegram holding up the trials was |sent more than a month before Secretary | Wilson asked the Attorney-General for delay. “Why was this telegram sent from his |hotel?" he demanded, “Did someone |call upon the Attorney-Generai at his hotel and try to exert insidious political pull in having the cases postponed?” “It was evidently necessary to white- wash the action of the Attorney-Gen- eral.” said Kahn, discusaing President |Wilon's action in the case. “Why the | President saw fit to scold and ceni 'McNab and at the same time adopted {his poltcy of proceeding promptly with |the cases passes all comprehension.” If McNab did right in insisting on the early trinl of these cases—and both the Prcsident and the Attorney-General now adopt his views and insist that the casen must be tried promptly and at an rly Wate, why should McNab have on censured? If Insidious political pull was being successfully used to cause ‘the Attorney-General to order a postponement of the cases, why should the censure not have fallen upon the ehoulders of the Attorney-General? “Instead of having been blamed and condemned, McNab should have been commended by the President of the United States, If the President ‘had called on hiti to withdraw his resig- Nation and proceed with the trial of | these cases he would have made him- self infinitely stronger with his coun- trymen." Representat!, McKellar of Tennessee, one of the Democrats who steadfastly oppesed discussion of the case, charac teriaed Representative Kahn's speech as 4 “political harangue,” and declared that “every member is disappomted by the failure of the gentleman from California | to froduce that exposure whic’: we all lexpected.” The House was wasting time speeding five hours discussing #0 “incon- OF sequential a matter of petty politics,” he | declared, — Want “Pork” Right Away. WASHINGTON, July 2%—At the re- | quest of Speaker Clark a Democratic caucus has been called for next week to Perdomo played a prominent| distribute in a hurry the fat contained Niea- in the $10,000,000 "Pork Barrel” passed at the last session, my shisha die s y Ve @ tg " i eae Leroeboia |? te Cy " dna Print ea dames McCroery & Co. 4 34th Street 23rd Street | Purchases made on Wednesday or Thursday will appear on bill rendered September the Ist. Unusual Sale WHITE SHOES Women’s Sorosis Boots, Oxfords, Pumps and Colonials. itt ‘ Ck 2.95 and 3.85 value 4.00 to 8.00 Shoe Departments are located,—Second Floor} Thirty-fourth Street, Main Floor, Twenty-third Street. WASH DRESS GUODS 15,000 yards of White French Cotton Crepe— superior quality. 40 inches wide. 38c yd. value 75e. 4 TRUNKS, BAGS & CASES Considerably Reduced. Dress Trunks,— made on best basswood frames, hard fibre bound, strapped with leather, bronzed steel combination trimmings, hand-riveted. Fitted with waist, millinery and shoe compartments, also dress trays. Sizes 36, 38 and 40 inches. 9.75 regularly 13.50 to 15.00 Steamer Trunks, — bound and strapped with hest leather, hand-riveted, bronzed steel trimmings. Sizes 36, 38 and 40 inches. 7.25 regularly 8.75 to 9.75 Russet and Brown Cowhide Bags,—saddler sewn, reinforced corners, leather lined, with inside pockets. Sizes 16, 17 and 18 inches. , 4.75 regularly 6.50 to 7.00 Rattan Suit Cases with double steel frames, straps all around, reinforced corners and top pockets. Sizes 24 to 36 inches. regularly 3.50 Vacation Ki and a 48-page A i id \ \ \ \ to the Injured’’ \\ BOOKLET WAG FREE for the Coupon IN NEXT SUNDAY’S WORLD This Kit, made up by special ar- rangement with The World by Johnson & Johnson and compris- ing a number of articles, is inval- vable at home or on the summer vacation. The Coupon will be redeemable at any office of The World. Be sure you cut out the coupon IN NEXT SUNDAY’S WORLD|

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